Have you bought a second (third or fourth) bottle of any of the perfumes you own already?

Which perfumes have you bought back-up bottles of?

What are your reasons for doing so? Is it because of reformulation or discontinuation?

Are there perfumes you wish you had bought a back-up bottle of when you had the chance?

Or do you have so many bottles in your collection that it doesn’t make sense for you to double up?

My Answer:

I do occasionally buy back-up bottles, usually when it comes to perfumes that have been reformulated or discontinued.

I have two back-up bottles of pre-reformulation Diorella, because it gets paler and duller with each new incarnation.

Recently I purchased a second bottle of Vol de Nuit extrait (albeit a modern version whereas my first bottle is vintage). I did this because it was going for a good price on an auction site and it’s quite possibly my favourite perfume of all-time.

My favourite leather, Cuir de Lancome, is a discontinued beauty so I’ve been meaning to buy a back-up bottle of that for ages. I should have done it sooner because it’s now doubled in price.

Good question – I don’t see this discussed much. I have occasionally bought back-ups, including a bottle of a now d/c gem by Sonoma Scent Studio called Femme Jolie (ripe fruit, spice and cedar, a bit like Feminite du Bois). Like you I have considered a back up of Cuir de Lancome but have so far not gone there, despite the price rise. I’m certain my 50mls will be enough.

Still, it’s worth buying a backup even of a mainstream fragrance if you really love it. Who would have thought that Miss Dior Cherie and J’Adore would be reformulated so soon? I try and follow the Tania Sanchez rule: when you love something, buy it. Otherwise you’ll find yourself bidding against other fools who didn’t get it when they could.

annemarie, I actually won an auction for Cuir de Lancome last night and got it for£35. I was pleased with that as it’s usually Buy It Now for £60. I have only half a bottle left and it’s my favourite leather by a mile so I think it was worth it. You do have to weigh up whether what you’ve got will last you.

I agree that if you love something, go for it. Another rule could be: Don’t expect any Dior perfume to stay the same for long.

Yeah, I’ve pretty much written off Dior, at least in the mainstream. Did you notice Victoria last week on BdJ had some nice things to say about recent improvements to two Guerlains? Mitsouko and one other, can’t remember which.

Congratulations on the Lancome! The price seems to rise every month on that one. Well done.

Thanks for the tip, I’ve just looked it up. The other perfume Victoria feels has improved with recent reformulation is Chamade. I’m going to have to check that out. It’s so rare for perfumes to be changed for the better.

I’ve bought quite a few back up bottles – in some cases I’m happy I did, in others I’m not sure….
I’ve bought a backup of Shalimar extrait (because these classics get tampered with, so who knows what will happen to them in the future?), no regrets here.
I’ve bought a back-up of shalimar ode à la vanille du Madagascar (yes, I’ve shorten the name!), and sort of regret it…one bottle was enough, and I prefer the extrait, after all…I suppose I was caught in the limited edition trap!
And then there are those 3 back ups of Attrape coeur (discontinued) – no regrets there: I love, love the perfume, winter would not be the same without this rich and decandet potion of candied violets and VOV, and I told myself that if 4 bottles total ends up being too much, well, I can always sell one!
Do different concentrations count as back ups? In that case I have few other Shalimars and Bois des iles in my drawers…
Ouch! It looks that I’m the only really guilty one with multiple back ups, at the moment….

Zazie, I’m sure you won’t be the only one hoarding back ups for long! You’ll never regret those bottles of Attrape Coeur and as you say, you can always sell one on if need be.

You make a really good point about limited editions. That is another really difficult one. Do you buy up and take that risk that you might go off it or it will be added to the permanent collection anyway? Or you do you just buy one and fear using it up? Another reason why I don’t like LEs.

Let’s not count different concentrations because then I’d have to add a couple more too!

Hi Alex, I have heard the rumour about ST but it’s not under the “Last Chance to Buy” section of their website at the moment (unlike Traversee du Bosphore, Coeur de Vetiver Sacre, Bois Farine and a few others). Another bottle wouldn’t hurt if you love it so much though and have the cash in the New Year.

I bought a backup bottle of my beloved Prada Amber Pour Homme and when my mom decided she wants Vanille Insensee from Atelier Cologne I used their free shipping opportunity and ordered it from France and grabbed a petit flacon of Rose Anonyme – now I have both huge and small bottle.

What a great saying of your mother’s! Sounds like the sort of thing mine would have endorsed. 😉 I have two back up bottles currently – of discontinued or soon-to-be so scents – namely PG Bois Naufrage and Cuir de Lancome(!). I picked the latter up the other week for about £45 delivered vs the £30 I paid in T K Maxx for my first bottle. I looked online just now and couldn’t see it again, so if you are struggling, do come to me for a top up!

I’ve done this several times, due to fear of not being able to get a favourite again, and worries about reformulation/discontinuation. I have backup bottles of Séville à l’Aube (because it was meant to be limited edition); Tweed (vintage); Je Reviens (vintage); Tea for Two (because they discontinued it); and Arpège (vintage).

I have a small back-up bottle of DK Black Cashmere vintage, and one of Organza Indecence vintage. But really, I don’t know if I will live long enough to use all the perfumes I have, so I am thinking more in terms of buying decants rather than full bottles than about buying back-up bottles.

Discerning also has a lot to do with storage space in my situation, my house is tiny and perfumes /jewelry /scarves all live in the same antique cabinet. In general, nothing comes into our house without something going out, but my hobbies – and my husband’s tools – are the exception. It should be noted that tools take up more space than perfume 😉

I can see that it must concentrate the mind if space is at a premium. You can’t really make rash purchases if you have to get rid of something to make room. I’d love to look through your antique cabinet. I’d love something like that.

I’m glad your hobbies are an exception and it’s noted that tools take up more space!

I, like Zazie, LOVE Attrape Coeur, and was lucky enough to obtain a second bottle from the Guerlain boutique in Las Vegas! It has to be my all-time favorite scent! I have never purchased
any other back-ups, because I am always on the search for my next “true love”!

Lilly, it’s awful when those rumours switch us into panic mode. What do I know, but I’d be shocked if Guerlain ever discontinued Apres L’Ondee. It’s such a classic cornerstone of their collection. Better to be safe than sorry though if you’d be that heartbroken.

I have never had the funds for back up bottles, although there are 2 that I would want to have (Balenciaga Le Dix being one). I console myself that there are many new beautiful scents being made each day, so I may be sad for a moment if one is unavailable when I run out, but
there will be many willing to take it’s place.

That’s such a great attitude to have, shellyw. I spend way too much time brooding about what I should have done in life and that extends to perfume. I’m scared of having regrets. But as you say, there are new perfumes coming out all the time so we shouldn’t dwell on the ones that got away.

Of course, Tara.
I buy backups of my most special favorites and of vintages I love (Lyric Woman, Kiki, vintage Diorella, Femme and L’Heure Bleue)
Main concerns for this are possible reformulation and unavailability where I live.

Not often, and more by chance than design, but I do have back ups of Tea for Two (because they discontinued it, and surprisingly I realised this – usually I don’t till its too late); and Feminite de Bois, I have 3 of the old-style bottles in different shapes (they were selling off the stock at discounted prices in Selfridges, I happened to walk past).
There are a couple of others I really regret not getting extras; Yes Rocher Rose Absolue, I like this more and more each time I wear it (beats so many niche releases), but they discontinued it!
Also Cuir and the other Lancome classics, I have one cuir, but not climat or sikkim. Mostly, though I prefer recent to older creations, so don’t worry too much about back ups.

Alice, you’re so lucky that you generally prefer newer creations to the older or vintage versions. That will save you a lot of heartache. But how lucky that you have 3 bottles of the original Feminite du Bois! That walk through in Selfridges was great timing.

Sometimes like with your Rose Absolue, you don’t realise just how much you love it until it’s no longer available.

I always wondered about Tea for Two so went for it unsniffed when it popped up on the L’Artisan website recently. Love it.

Hi Tara, yes I do
Vintage femme, quite a few Guerlains; VdN (double up of a couple of both edt and extrait ;-)), H’LB, Mitsy extrait, Aroma Allegoria Exaltant, Caron Parfum Sacre extrait (because it’s a great frag and at the prices I got them, it was way too good a deal to miss) And Feu d’Issey- which wasn’t on purpose, but after getting a bottle for sentimental reasons, since I used to wear it all the time when it first got out, I rediscovered a bottle in a box which had moved around with me for a decade without being opened. I don’t really need the Feu back-up, but as for the rest, I’m very happy with my back-ups and the only perfume at the moment that I’d like to add to the back-up list would be Attrape Coeur/ Guet Apens, maybe if I wish it enough it will magically come to happen 😀

Loved reading about your back up bottles. I have a 90ml pre-reformulation VdN edt but it’s going down way too quick. You’re making me wonder now if I should take action.

Parfum Sacre is wonderful and fancy discovering you have a spare bottle of Feu d’Issey! If you ever feel like it you could sell that and re-invest in another bottle of Attrape Coeur if one comes up (or make an offer to one of those above with several bottles!). Love that boozy, violet amber but i was too late to get a bottle. Luckily, I can live with that though.

I haven’t ever bought a back up bottle, but I don’t really have the space. I would also worry that in my un-climate controlled apartment, it would go before I could get to it. I love seeing what other people have backed up though. A bottle of Feu d’Issey . . . sigh.

I have a back-up bottle of Cuir de Lancome and I wish I had one of Iris Ganache, because I don’t dare use the one I have. I hate knowing I can’t get something I love anymore, so I save it, even though I know that is stupid, because I don’t get to enjoy it at all. 😦

I’ve got a variety of back-ups; sounds sooo much nicer than hoarding! Vol de Nuit, Cuir de Lancôme, Bal a Versailles, Femme Jolie. Usually because I’ve found it at a great price, but sometimes because it’s not going to be available much longer. They take up 2 of 3 crispers in the kitchen fridge.

Cuir de Lancome is discontinued…oh no, I didn’t think that it would ever go away and should have bought a back-up bottle. I bought two bottles of this year’s Bronze Goddess, and bought several of Vol de Nuit BEFORE I knew that it had morphed into faux Vol de Nuit… The next extra bottle purchase will be Amber deMerveilles since I adore that fragrance and worry about its future.

I think this may be the trickiest question for me, in terms of buying habits. I have had negative experiences both ways. To take just two examples: I bought some back-up bottles of Shalimar because it was in an amazing sale. A few months later, I kind of “went off” Shalimar (not that I don’t like it, but for other reasons), so I eventually got rid of those back-up bottles. On the other hand, I didn’t buy back-up bottles of Miss Dior Cherie when I heard about the reformulation, because I thought I had outgrown it and I had enough. Fast forward two years, and I’m on eBay trying to find something that is practically extinct. Sigh. I don’t know what the right answer is.

That’s exactly one of the hardest things about the question of buying back-up bottles. We can’t look into the future and know how much we will use, if we will still like it, or like it even more!

Overall I think maybe it’s better to buy because you can always sell on as you did with Shalimar and protect yourself from that awful MDC situation. Hope you find some at a decent price. If you let me know what to look for, I can keep an eye out on Ebay UK for you.

I love this question-I do have 2 backups, one of Teo Cabanel Alahine because I didn’t like their new bottles (same edp I believe) and the lovely, inexpensive Laura Mercier Un Minuit d’Enchantee, which is good as I’m almost out of the 1st bottle. I tend to believe ill never use up all the perfumes I have but it doesn’t stop me from getting more (samples, decants and FBs). If I were to get into the frenzied acquisition of vintages of my favorite classics, I would be in big trouble.

My only back-ups are two extra bottles of Cuir de Lancome, and I’m so happy to have them since it is still the closest thing I’ve got to a signature scent and is now at least twice the price I paid initially. Luckily, even though I adore it, I still wear a lot of fragrances as well, so between those two bottles and the one I’m about half-way through, they should last me for years.

I have back-up bottles only for two perfumes, one discontinued (Lancome Climat – my first and gratest love) and one reformulated (Miss Dior parfum, vintage). There are a couple of perfumes for which I’ll run if I hear they are about to be discontinued but other than that I have too many perfumes to care for more bottles.

I don’t have any right now, but I’m seriously considering getting a second bottle of 28 la Pausa (there are some major rumblings about it being dc’ed), because I can’t ever imagine myself being without it.

Dionne, not being able to imagine being without a particular perfume is the perfect reason for getting a back-up in my book. Shame about 28 La Pausa, but I guess at least you’ve got a heads-up, if it is true. It’s so difficult to know about these rumours but an extra bottle of a great love can’t hurt.

In some cases, I have backups (No. 5 vintage parfum, Anais Anais EDT, Aimez-Moi EDP, Bandit EDP, White Linen, Lou Lou parfum). In others, I have a fragrance in its different iterations (even though I may not need to have ALL of them!): Shalimar in vintage parfum and cologne, and in modern EDT and EDP; No. 5 in parfum and cologne; Anais Anais in EDT and EDP; Lou Lou in EDP and parfum).

I’m guilty. I’ve recently purchased a second bottle of PG’s Tonkamande. It’s my favourite perfume of all time and I’m so sad that it was a limited edition fragrance. Though I’ve bought a ‘re-edition’ bottle (100ml EdT- Boyfriend: “You’re mad!”), I hope it’s still the same scent and it didn’t lose the charm and the power of the ‘Original’ EdP.
If I were to come across a scent again, that blows me away like Tonkamande did, I’d always purchase a backup bottle. (My BF has no saying in this anyway. 😉 )

I use up perfume *very* slowly, so generally speaking back-ups don’t make sense for me. Like many others here I bought a second bottle of Cuir de Lancome, but soon realised that I’m not using the first one fast enough to finish it in the next 2 decades; so I sold the spare on again.

The exception to this is Guerlain’s Terracotta, which I am very glad to have a back-up of (I could do with more, in fact). It’s probably the scent I spray most lavishly and use most frequently, summer and winter, and after 4 years I’m almost 2/3s through bottle 1. It’s v comforting to know I’ll be able to keep wearing it for a little while longer.

Figuier, I think you’ve hit the nail on the head when you talk about how comforting it is to know you have several years’ supply of your favourite perfume. That’s why we do it. To avoid the dread of ever being without our great loves.